Poll: 65 Percent of Democrats Support Gay Marriage

NEW YORK (AP) - The partisan gap over same-sex marriage continues to widen, with 65 percent of Democrats now supporting it compared to 24 percent of Republicans, according to poll released Tuesday by the Pew Research Center.

The poll found an increase in support among Democrats since President Barack Obama announced in May that he favors same-sex marriage. In April, a Pew poll gauged support among Democrats at 59 percent.

The latest poll, conducted jointly by the Pew’s Forum on Religion and Public Life and its Center for the People and the Press, was released a day after Democratic Party leaders said they intended to add support for gay marriage to the party platform at the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte, N.C., in early September.

At the time of the last convention, in 2008, 50 percent of Democrats favored allowing gays and lesbians to marry legally, while 42 percent were opposed. In the new poll, only 29 percent of Democrats were opposed.

According to Pew, support for gay marriage also has increased among independents. In the new poll, 51 percent of independents favor it, and 40 percent are opposed. In 2008, 44 percent of independents backed gay marriage, 45 percent were against it.

Advocates of gay marriage say the trends highlighted by Pew and other pollsters suggest that support for it by Obama and his party will be an asset in the Nov. 6 election. Foes of gay marriage disagree, noting that a majority of voters in several swing states have supported amendments banning gay marriage, including Ohio, Florida, Virginia and North Carolina, where the ban prevailed in the May 8 primary.

"There are many Democratic members of Congress, and officeholders further down the ticket, who live in states and districts where it will be a serious disadvantage to be identified with ’the gay marriage party,’" said Peter Sprigg of the conservative Family Research Council.

Gay marriage will be on the ballot in four states on Nov 6. Voters in Maryland, Washington state and Maine will have a chance to join six other states in legalizing same-sex marriage, while Minnesotans will be voting on a ban-gay-marriage amendment.

Overall, Americans remain closely divided on same-sex marriage. The new Pew poll found 48 percent in favor and 44 percent opposed, virtually unchanged from a survey in April - before to Obama’s announcement.

Among blacks, 51 percent oppose gay marriage and 40 percent favor it, according to Pew - about the same as in April. Longer term, blacks have become much more supportive; in 2008 only 26 percent supported gay marriage.

The new poll was conducted by telephone June 28-July 9 among a random national sample of 2,973 adults, including 774 self-identified Republicans, 995 Democrats and 1,037 independents.

Results among all adults have a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 2.1 percentage points, including 4.1 percent for Republicans, 3.6 percent for Democrats and 3.5 percent for independents.

Copyright Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Comments

Anonymous, 2012-08-02 13:51:55

Wow...only 65%? So disappointing. There’s still a lot of hates out there. Hate and inequality masked under the guise of family value. Its a republican creation. Democrats should expose that during the next election.

Anonymous, 2012-08-02 18:07:54

Going in the right direction though. Irony: Too many "family value", right-wing, "god-fearing" NOTW, homophobic, Republicans are too dumb and poor to even realize they are too dumb and poor to logically be Republicans.

Wayne Madden, 2012-08-03 19:44:03

What I want to know is how many of those who support marriage equality will actually make an extra effort to get out and speak out or even vote for it. It is all well and good to support the idea of marriage equality, but that support means nothing unless people actually support it in referenda when it comes to a vote.

Anonymous, 2012-08-03 21:18:10

I will, and I don’t even have anyone waiting in the wings for cranky, crotchity, outspoken, smart-assed, stubborn ole me.

Add your comment here:

Comments on Facebook

Related Stories

The Democratic Party is moving to include support for gay marriage in the official party platform for the first time, a Democratic official said Monday, marking a key milestone for advocates of same-sex unions.

Texas Democratic Party Chair Boyd Richie is among the 11 state Democratic Party chairs who announced on Thursday their support of a proposal that would add marriage for same-sex couples to their party’s 2012 platform.

Now that Mitt Romney has emerged as the likely GOP presidential nominee, congressional Republicans increasingly are taking their cues from him even if it causes heartburn and grumbling among conservatives unhappy about having to beat a tactical retreat.